Didn't see this before, if you haven't found anything yet, check out Bandicam, as That's what you see on a lot of tut vids.

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Thank you. Yes, I was pointed to Bandicam before. I also tried the aforementioned Debut Software, and I was able to use the DirectSound Driver with it, but still it only records audio as mp3 128 bit. I used it for the project, but for the next one I need way better audio quality, so I'll test Bandicam.

I am wondering how the pros do all those tips and tricks videos? Whenever I try to record something in which my DAW is involved, there is either no sound at all, or it is crappy and noisy.

I tried it with 'Debut Video Capture' (noisy sound and only via mme) and I also tried it with free software, which didn't record sound at all.

So, what software and what settings do I need to record me while working in the DAW with proper sound?

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You need an interface with a loopback feature. RME and Steinberg interfaces have this. When you have your DAW open, it takes full control of your audio driver so that is why you cannot hear anything when doing a screen capture. This is also needed if you ever plan on streaming your desktop while you have your DAW open.

or you can use the free VSDC Video Editor. When you open the video recording page it allows you to choose between the webcam mic, your own mic (through your audio interface) or no audio at all. This allows you (depending on the audio interface you have) to record audio directly into your preferred DAW and add that audio to the video when doing the editing. Or you can record audio via your audio interface in WAV or MP3, stereo or mono... plenty of choice there. Worth checking out.

I use bandicam and voicemeteer pro .
Firstly I sent my mic signal to Daw. I open channel for my mic and Insert : Gate/Compressor for eleminate noise and some eq. And after recording using noise filter for eleminate again.

The go-to software of choice is camtasia. As for audio: hook the stereo bus to an input of your audio interface, select that as the audio input for the recording, mute your mains, work with headphones, done.

check the software 'movavi screen capture' on the sister site. buy a mic and plug it in your audio interface. inside your daw, route that to a channel. im not sure how it works with the asio drivers because each soundcard is diffrent
if you want more broadcasting features (
with an extra window for a webcam showing you) check out obs (its freeware) and has support for twitch and youtube built in

CamStudio is bare-bones, simple to use, free screen recording application that I personally use when I don't want to use my pirated, somewhat bloated, Camtasia (which I don't even have it installed at the moment).

You could also try using Virtual Audio Cable, or another similar program, to send your main mix to a virtual audio channel which you can then record in your screen capture software.

I have a little Mackie 402-VLZ3 mixer that I use whenever I want to do voice overs or tutorials. I just have my audio interfaces audio out running to the tape input on my mixer then have the main out running to two inputs on my audio interface.

as Sombra said, you need an interface which can do loopback,
I can only recommend RME, their devices and drivers are rock solid, no matter which Windows or OSX version you use
also you may check some software loopback solutions, such as ASIO Link Pro, but keep in mind those will stress the cpu, so unless you have powerful rig, you might have problems when simultaneously recording (as it's also fairly cpu-demanding task already)